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Friday, 23 March 2012

10 Basic Computer Tips And Tricks For New Computer Users

10 Basic Computer Tips And Tricks For New Computer
Users

One of the worst things
that can happen when you first start using computers is to have some kid sit
down next to you and do everything you’re doing in half as much time, so we’ve
put together 10 basic computer tips and tricks for new computer users that will
improve your productivity and let you show up that kid.

Computer tips and tricks

We have loads of computer tips
on this website and if you enjoy this article you must also see more top 10 computer tips.

Computer Tips #1: Find Text Quick With Ctrl-F

This is one of those important computer tips that you will use all the
time. One of the things I find myself doing most frequently is trying to find
one specific word or sentence within a much longer document or webpage. Happily,
if you know what you’re looking for, Windows makes it easy to find it.

In almost every application, you can
type Ctrl-F (F for Find) to find a word or series of characters. Ctrl-F works in
Microsoft Word and Excel,
all major Web browsers, Notepad, and many other applications. Go ahead and give
it a try right now in your Web browser—search for the word “shortcut” in the
next section.

Computer Tips #2: Put Programs On Your Desktop

You’ve probably already figured out that you can put documents, pictures, and
other things you frequently use on your desktop, but you may not realize that
you can also put your most often used programs on your desktop too. This is one
of those computer tips that is often neglected.
Getting the program there is a little tricky, but it’s certainly a lot
quicker than scrolling through your giant Start menu to find the program each
time.

First, find the program in your
Start menu, then place the mouse over the program and click the right-side mouse
button once. Chose the option that says Create
Shortcut On Desktop. The program icon should immediately appear on your
desktop—now you can start it any time you want with a simple double-click. When
you get to pro status you can re-size
your desktop icons.

Computer Tips #3: Get Help Now

Confused? Need help but don’t know who to ask? Try checking the program’s
built-in manual—almost every program has one, even if you don’t see a Help menu.
Just press the F1 key on the top row of your keyboard.
Note: some smaller laptops and netbooks don’t have a F1 key. On these smaller
keyboards, look for a key (often the number 1 key) with F1 written in small
print (usually blue). Then look for a key labeled FN (for function). Press FN
plus the F1 key to get the help manual.

Computer Tips #4: Use Keyboard Navigation

Probably the invention that made
computers most accessible to the general pubic was the mouse. The mouse saves
you from having to memorize a whole bunch of weird keyboard commands. But the
mouse also has a downside—it’s kinda slow. (It’s also not easy to use if your
hands shake.) Here is a guide to using
a computer mouse.

You can give yourself a performance boost by using keyboard navigation. Look
closely at the menus in a program like Microsoft Word and you’ll see many words
have an underlined letter. To open the menu or activate the function with an
underlined letter, press the Alt key plus that letter.
For example, to open the File menu in Microsoft Word, press Alt-F.
After a menu is open, you can activate specific options within it by pressing
just the underlined letter—no Alt key is necessary. For example, to Save within
the File menu, press s.

Computer Tips #5: Right-Click For Context Options

Wouldn’t it be nice if the computer knew what you wanted to do next? Well, it
kind of does. Most programs have what’s called the “context menu”, where the
computer guesses what you’d want to do in each part of the program and gives you
a menu to do those things.
You can access the context menu by clicking the right mouse button. Try it
right now in your Web browser. Depending on which Web browser you use and where
you click on this page, you might see options like “view page source” or “open
link in new window”.
To get these same options without the context menu, you’d either have to do a
lot of clicking through menus or you’d have to memorize keyboard shortcuts. The
context menu here saves you a lot of time.

Computer Tips #6: Pro Multi-tasking

Here is one of my favorite computer tips and probably the easiest. Do you
switch programs a lot? I do. I’m often trying to read my research notes and
write an article at the same time, forcing me to switch between two windows a
lot.
But switching between two windows takes a long time with the mouse. You need
to take one hand off the keyboard, grab the mouse, scroll over to the next
window, click, and put your hand back on the keyboard. Wouldn’t it be nice if
you could switch windows without taking your hand off the keyboard? You can.
To switch windows, press Alt-Tab. The windows are lined up in the order of
which you last used them, so pressing Alt-Tab will take you to the last window
you used. Pressing Alt-Tab-Tab (two tabs) will take you to the window you used
before that.
If you master Alt-Tab, you’ll be a master multi-tasker.

Computer Tips #7: Remove Unused Programs

Old programs can slow down your computer by wasting your computer’s limited
resources. Also, many programs today install desktop icons and taskbar applets
that clutter up your computer, making it difficult for you to use it
effectively.
Luckily, removing most programs is easy on Windows. Go to the control panel,
open the Add/Remove Programs application, click on a program you don’t use any
more, and click the Remove button. The program will be removed within a few
seconds—although you may need to reboot your computer for the program’s icon to
disappear from your taskbar.

Computer Tips #8: Close Windows Quick

You’ve been surfing the Internet at work, but the boss just appeared around
the corner—quick, what do you do?
You can close down any program quickly by pressing Alt-F4. But Alt-F4 isn’t
just great for emergency situations, it’s also useful for closing all those
other little applications you use, like the calculator.

Computer Tips #9: The Hidden Diagnostic Panel

You probably already know about the Control Panel where Windows lets you
change most of its settings, but did you know that there’s also a hidden
diagnostic panel that tells you what’s going on with your computer right
now?
It’s only accessible to those who know the special key combination: hold down
Ctrl and Alt and then quickly press and release Delete. Go ahead, try it right
now. CTRL, ALT, DEL.
This task manager includes all sorts of information about what programs are
running, how much computer processing they’re using, how much network traffic
your computer is running. You can use the buttons to force programs to quit and
perform other important operations.
The most useful thing you can do with the task manager is find programs that
are using too much computer processing (CPU) and force them to quit (if you
don’t need them). For example, sometimes Web browsers or the Adobe Flash player
will break and try to use all of your CPU—if that’s the case, simply find the
program, highlight it, and click Force Quit.

You can also restart
explorer.exe when all your desktop icons and task bar disappear.

Computer Tips #10: Never Shutdown Your Computer Again

Shutting
down your computer saves power and prevents computer parts from wearing down
too soon, but closing all of your programs every night just to re-open them
again the next morning can become quite annoying.

The programmers at Microsoft have the same problem, so they designed a
feature called “hibernate.” When you hibernate your computer, all of your
programs are saved just they way they are and then your computer is shut off.
When you start the computer again, all of your computer programs are restored.
It has all the benefits of leaving your computer on overnight without any of the
drawbacks.
There’s just one catch: hibernate doesn’t work on all computers. It works
really well on most laptops, but it may not work on older desktops. If it
doesn’t work, you’ll lose any unsaved changes to your documents, so the first
time you try it, make sure you save everything that’s important to you.
To hibernate, open the Start menu and click the Shutdown button. On the menu
that appears, choose the Hibernate option—not the shutdown option. It will take
a little longer to hibernate than it does to shutdown while your computer saves
everything, but when the hibernating is finished, your computer should shut down
like normal.
Computer tips for hibernating: To resume from hibernating, turn your computer
back on like your normally would. Again, turning back on might take a little
longer (although it usually goes quicker), but you should see all of your
programs running just like they were before you pressed Hibernate. You can even
try it right now–save any important files, hibernate, turn your computer back
on, and you’ll should still be reading this article about computer
tips.